
Originally Posted by
Offshore Angler
Bob, we're contemporaries and I'm playing more shows now than ever before. It's out there - but it's like everything else in the music biz - it doesn't come to you and you need to work hard to make it happen.
Agreed with the open jam thing. The Three Chord Wannabees have ruined them for everybody. I mean, yeah, we used to put jams together and had some players show up, we basically ended them because they were turning into 3 chord wank-fests. I had a nice experience that was similar to the old days a few months ago. Had a guy who is a pro musician put a throw together to host and it was fun hanging with real players like back in the day. I was asked to come to another one and well, it was not-so-good. There seems to be a culture of folks who are not decent enough players to play professionally that are on the "Jam Circuit". At our experience level, a whole night of listening to these folks is tough. Great, they know a scale or two and can basically hold the beat, but that's about it. When every solo starts by bending the 4th up a whole step - well you know it's going to be a loooong night.
What I have found though is that the 90's boomer players that were all into Clapton and SRV and bragging about their "tone" have really disappeared into the woodwork as we age. So somehow the natural distillation process has removed a lot of the guys (not being sexist, girls playing guitar at a jam are rarer than hen's teeth) our age that were wannabees but lacked what it takes to be a pro musician.
There are a lot of competent bands out there, but the issue is that venues that want live music are getting harder to come by.
Then the other reality is that back in 1990 we were making $75 to $100 per night for a local bar gig and today, 35 years later, we're making the same money for a bar gig. That sucks and it's mostly because for a long, long time so many sucky bands would work for $300/night. Good news is that we've paid our dues a few times over, established a name and developed out show to where we now get more than that. Downside is, it requires a lot of travel with the associated expenses. Trailer, road crew, sound crew, lights etc. That's more ways to split up the pie so in reality, on some drive away shows I about break even. But on the other hand, on some shows I get paid handsomely so if you average it all out it's worth it.
And another thing that's better today is the gear we use. I mean, today I can play a stadium with a Pro Jr. No need to lug a Twin or a four-holer around like back in the day. Heck, even my DR is more than is required today. In fact, amps are not mandatory today to play professionally.
It's the music biz and you just need to take it day-by-day. We all have droughts from time to time. Power through. You're a good player with a lot of great experience so something will come along. Always does. You've got the chops and you know what it takes to do the job. Hang in there, it will happen.
In the meantime, you are always welcome to play with us if the mood strikes. We have a lot of shows coming up and it would be nice for me to lay back and let somebody else have a go once in a while. Plus it keeps it fresh and adds some energy!
Chuck